Sprache: Spanisch
Verlag: universitat europea de madrid - CEES, 1996
ISBN 10: 8488881541 ISBN 13: 9788488881540
Anbieter: Libros de papel, Madrid, M, Spanien
Encuadernación de tapa dura. Zustand: Como Nuevo. edicion facsimil de la de amberes,1612,ilustraciones bn, nº interno 400.409.
Verlag: apud Franciscum Foppens, bibliopolam sub signo Sancti Spiritus, Bruxellis, 1683
Anbieter: Rulon-Miller Books (ABAA / ILAB), St. Paul, MN, USA
4to, pp. [8], 205, [3]; text in Latin, Italian, Dutch and French; title page printed in red and black with engraved vignette of Horace; engraved portrait of van Veen, 103 engraved plates; contemporary speckled calf, gilt-decorated spine in 6 compartments, label in 1 (but missing); bottom panel perished, the whole rubbed and worn, but the binding remains sound and the textblock is clean. Engraved bookplate of R. Chandler, and later ownership signature of F. H. Gall, 1879. Mills College Check List 363; Riedel-Horatiana U-2. Landwehr (Emblem & fable books) 823; Landwehr, J. Dutch emblem books, 242.
Verlag: Hendrik Wetstein, Amsterdam, 1684
Anbieter: Rulon-Miller Books (ABAA / ILAB), St. Paul, MN, USA
8vo, pp. 8 p.l., 207, [9]; text in Latin, German, French and Dutch; engraved title by G. de Lairesse; printed title page in red and black, title with printer's woodcut device; woodcut ornaments and initials throughout; 103 engraved copperplates in the text; contemporary full parchment, old red leather label on spine (chipped, with some loss); binding soiled, a few ink smears and light spotting in the text, but overall a very good, sound copy. One of the most famous books of emblems of the seventeenth century, designed and illustrated by the Flemish painter and art theorist Otto van Veen (1550-1629). First printed in quarto format in 1607. The Dutch verses are by A. Jansen van Ter Goes. Van Veen had studied for seven years under Federigo Zuccari at Rome. Settling in Antwerp in 1593, he began painting for the churches and public buildings, and for several years, from 1596 to 1600, numbered Rubens among his pupils. His work attracted the admiration and patronage of the Archduke Albert, who succeeded the Prince of Parma in the government of the Low Countries. He published three other emblem books, 'Amorum Emblemata' (1608), 'Amoris Divini Emblemata' (1615) and 'Emblemata Sive Sybola' (1624). Not in Mills College Check List or Riedel-Horatiana. Brunet V 1025. Graesse VII 233. Landwehr, Dutch Emblem Books, 243. Landwehr, Emblem Books in the Low Countries, 682.